genetics and inherited arrhythmia syndromes€¦ · genetics and inherited arrhythmia syndromes...
TRANSCRIPT
Genetics and Inherited Arrhythmia Syndromes (The Good, The Bad and The Ugly)
Melanie Care, MSc, CCGC Genetic Counsellor
Inherited Arrhythmia Clinic, Toronto General Hospital
• No COI to disclose
Objectives
• To review basic inheritance in hereditary arrhythmias
• To discuss interpretation of genetic test results
• To demonstrate utility and limitations of genetic testing
Inherited Arrhythmias
Autosomal dominant Reduced Penetrance Variable Expression
A = disease-causing variant a = normal copy
Genetic Testing
• Rapid, high-throughput DNA analysis • Simultaneous testing of large numbers of gene
The Good….
• 21 yo with recurrent syncope • Resting ECG shows borderline QT • Exercise test shows abnormal QT dynamics s/o
LQTS
• Confirmation of diagnosis • Management recommendations • Accurate family risk assessment • Cascade screening
KCNQ1, p. Gln356X LONG QT SYNDROME
+ -
+
+
The Bad...
• 18 yo sudden death, autopsy consistent with ARVC
• Parents, siblings referred for clinical evaluations • 20 yo brother has features s/o ARVC
Genetic testing - negative
No mutations/variants detected OR
Gene variants detected known not to cause disease
• Clinical diagnosis not excluded – If clinical suspicion is high, negative results must be
interpreted with caution • Hereditary condition not ruled out • At-risk family members require comprehensive
evaluation and f/u
Care et al, Curr Cardiol Rep, 2017
• 49 y.o. man presents at local ER with fever • ECG shows Brugada pattern • Additional investigations equivocal
The Ugly…
**Not all gene variants cause disease**
• Diagnosis not confirmed/eliminated • Genetic cause not confirmed/eliminated • Genetic testing not useful for unaffected family
members
Variants of Uncertain Significance
Does this gene cause disease?
• How was the gene discovered? • Is there good evidence to support gene-
disease association
**The presence of a gene on a genetic testing panel does not equal association with disease**
Brugada syndrome - Genetic testing panels
Laboratory
# Genes on Testing Panel
Brugada syndrome
SCN5A
GDP1L
KCNH2 PKP2
CACNB2
CACNA1C SCN10A
HCN4
KCNJ8
KCND3
ABCC9
Does this variant cause disease?
Rare gene variants are present in the general population!
RYR2 rare variants identified in 9% of individuals referred for whole exome sequencing (all indications)
Does this result make sense?
• Genetic results must be interpreted in the context of clinical presentation
Why It Matters
ACTN2 p.Gly7Ser
VUS
Medical Advice Given: •Genetic testing for mother •IF result positive, genetics on other children and f/u for those who test positive •IF result negative, other children not at risk and no further f/u or testing required
Normal echo No clinical screening
No clinical screening No clinical screening
Why It Matters
KCNH2 p.Trp1001X Pathogenic
LQTS
ACTN2 p.Gly7Ser
VUS
KCNH2 p.Trp1001X Pathogenic
• Mother – negative for ACTN2, positive for KCNH2 • Half-siblings AT RISK, clinical evaluations and genetic testing
recommended
Conclusion
• Genetic testing can be a useful and powerful tool in confirming diagnoses, managing risk in affected patients, identifying at-risk family members
• Genetic testing is one piece of the puzzle • Genetic testing should be undertaken in the
context of expert, clinical evaluation and appropriate genetic counselling
Thank you!